ATHLETE

Vitaliy Rahimov

1984 - Today

Photo of Vitaliy Rahimov

Icon of person Vitaliy Rahimov

Vitaliy Medzhidovich Rahimov (Russian: Вита́лий Меджи́дович Раги́мов born 27 August 1984, Meghri, Armenian SSR) is an Azerbaijani athlete. Rahimov moved with his family to Azerbaijan in 1990. He has been trained in Greco-Roman wrestling since 1994. He made the Azerbaijani Olympic teams in 2004 and 2008. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Vitaliy Rahimov is the 3,804th most popular athlete (up from 4,361st in 2019), the 124th most popular biography from Armenia (up from 137th in 2019) and the 9th most popular Armenian Athlete.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Vitaliy Rahimov by language

Loading...

Among ATHLETES

Among athletes, Vitaliy Rahimov ranks 3,804 out of 6,025Before him are Naman Keïta, Kayla Harrison, Marco Arop, Olivia Borlée, Henk Grol, and Steven Holcomb. After him are Lisa Fernandez, Magali Messmer, Thomas Ebert, Inês Henriques, José Reyes, and Andrei Rybakou.

Most Popular Athletes in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1984, Vitaliy Rahimov ranks 673Before him are Robert Almer, Ivo Minář, Dmitri Kruglov, Hamdi Salihi, Miloš Ninković, and Grzegorz Wojtkowiak. After him are Gonzalo Bergessio, Dario Krešić, Fu Haifeng, Tagir Khaybulaev, Patrick Stump, and Saulius Mikoliūnas.

Others Born in 1984

Go to all Rankings

In Armenia

Among people born in Armenia, Vitaliy Rahimov ranks 124 out of 163Before him are Sergey Khachatryan (1985), Sipan Shiraz (1967), Roman Amoyan (1983), Hamlet Mkhitaryan (1973), Arsen Julfalakyan (1987), and Sevak Khanagyan (1987). After him are Edgar Manucharyan (1987), Hripsime Khurshudyan (1987), Gevorg Ghazaryan (1988), Armen Vardanyan (1982), Varazdat Haroyan (1992), and Dmitry Volkov (null).

Among ATHLETES In Armenia

Among athletes born in Armenia, Vitaliy Rahimov ranks 9Before him are Igor Tselovalnikov (1944), Anna Chicherova (1982), Oksen Mirzoyan (1961), Ara Abrahamian (1975), Artur Ayvazyan (1973), and Sergei Alifirenko (1959). After him are Hripsime Khurshudyan (1987), Dmitry Volkov (null), Gevorg Davtyan (1983), Gor Minasyan (1994), Nazik Avdalyan (1986), and Tigran Gevorg Martirosyan (1988).